大麻使用与患2型糖尿病风险增加四倍相关。
Cannabis use associated with quadrupled risk of developing type 2 diabetes

原始链接: https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-09-cannabis-quadrupled-diabetes-million-adults.html

一项近期研究分析了超过400万成年人的数据,发现大麻使用者患糖尿病的风险几乎增加了四倍。该研究在欧洲糖尿病研究协会上展示,将96,795名与大麻相关的诊断病例与超过400万名健康对照组进行匹配,并追踪了五年时间。 即使在考虑了胆固醇、血压和其他物质使用等因素后,大麻使用者的新发糖尿病病例率(2.2%)也显著高于非使用者(0.6%)。研究人员认为可能与胰岛素抵抗和不健康的饮食习惯有关,但还需要进一步调查。 虽然该研究并未*证明*大麻导致糖尿病,但它强调了对大麻使用者进行代谢监测的重要性,以及在药物滥用治疗中纳入糖尿病风险意识。研究结果强调,医疗专业人员应 routinely 与患者讨论大麻使用情况,尤其是在全球范围内合法化日益增加的情况下。局限性包括依赖自我报告的数据以及无法详细说明具体的消费模式。

最近一篇在Hacker News上被提及的研究表明,使用大麻与患2型糖尿病的风险增加四倍有关,引发了用户讨论。然而,评论员指出该主题的研究结果存在冲突,其中一篇链接到一项显示女性研究结果不同的研究。 一个关键点是,大麻引起的食欲(“想吃”)与血糖波动之间的潜在联系。重要的是,用户指出该研究*没有*区分摄入方法——特别是,大麻食用产品中通常含有的高糖分与吸食大麻的区别。与标准食品产品类似,食用产品缺乏监管和标签,被认为是一个重要的缺陷,可能导致结果偏差。 对话强调需要进一步研究大麻对内分泌系统的长期影响,以及不同的摄入方法如何影响糖尿病风险。
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原文

Cannabis use is linked to an almost quadrupling in the risk of developing diabetes, according to an analysis of real-world data from over 4 million adults, being presented at the Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) held in Vienna, Austria (15–19 Sept).

Cannabis use is increasing globally with an estimated 219 million users (4.3% of the global adult population) in 2021, but its long-term metabolic effects remain unknown. While some studies have suggested potential anti-inflammatory or weight management properties, others have raised concerns regarding glucose metabolism and , and the magnitude of the risk of developing diabetes hasn't been clear.

To strengthen the evidence base, Dr. Ibrahim Kamel from the Boston Medical Center, Massachusetts, U.S. and colleagues analyzed from 54 health care organizations (TriNetX Research Network, with centers from across U.S. and Europe) to identify 96,795 outpatients (aged between 18 and 50 years, 52.5% female) with cannabis-related diagnoses (ranging from occasional use to dependence, including cases of intoxication and withdrawal) between 2010 and 2018.

They were matched with 4,160,998 healthy individuals (with no record of substance use or major chronic conditions) based on age, sex, and underlying illnesses at the start of the study, and followed for five years.

After controlling HDL and LDL cholesterol, uncontrolled high blood pressure, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, cocaine use, alcohol use and several other lifestyle risk factors, the researchers found that new cases of diabetes were significantly higher in the cannabis group (1,937; 2.2%) compared to the healthy group (518; 0.6%), with statistical analysis showing cannabis users at nearly four times the risk of developing diabetes compared to non-users.

While the authors note that more research is needed to fully explain the association between cannabis and diabetes, it may come down to insulin resistance and unhealthy dietary behaviors. Nevertheless, the study's results have immediate implications for metabolic monitoring practices and public health messaging.

"As cannabis becomes more widely available and socially accepted and legalized in various jurisdictions, it is essential to understand its potential health risks," said lead author Dr. Kamel.

"These new sights from reliable real-world evidence highlight the importance of integrating diabetes risk awareness into substance use disorder treatment and counseling, as well as the need for health care professionals to routinely talk to patients about so that they can understand their overall diabetes risk and potential need for metabolic monitoring."

The authors note that more research is needed on the long-term endocrine effects of cannabis use and whether diabetes risks are limited to inhaled products or other forms of cannabis such as edibles.

Despite the important findings, this is a retrospective study and cannot prove that cannabis use causes , and the authors cannot rule out the possibility that other unmeasured factors may have influenced the results despite efforts to reduce confounding bias via propensity score matching. This study has limitations due to a lack of detailed cannabis consumption data and potential misclassification.

The authors acknowledge that the inherent limitations of real-world data often result from inconsistent patient reporting in electronic medical records.

They also note that there is a risk of bias because of imprecise measures of cannabis exposure and the reliance on participants to accurately report any cannabis use, even when they lived in places where the drug is illegal.

Provided by European Association for the Study of Diabetes

Citation: Cannabis use associated with quadrupled risk of developing type 2 diabetes, finds study of over 4 million adults (2025, September 14) retrieved 14 September 2025 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-09-cannabis-quadrupled-diabetes-million-adults.html

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